Friday, 16 January 2009

There are times when you might want to render a page specifically for printing (rather than using CSS). For example you might want to include or exclude specific information on the printed page. When users view the print-friendly page, you might want to include some instructions at the top of the page, but not have these themselves print out. You might want to let users know they are viewing a print-friendly version and provide them with a link back to the on-screen view.

Typically, the next action a user will take on viewing the page is to open the print dialogue box. We could attach a “window.print()” JavaScript action to the body’s onload event, or within a <script> tag somewhere in the body. However, having a dialogue box appear automatically is not particularly accessible as it changes the focus. The alternative is to insert a “print this page” link if the browser supports JavaScript. For non-JavaScript browsers, simply inform the user to use his or her browser’s print menu. This is demonstrated by the following HTML:

When you display a telephone number on screen, screen readers read it out as a single number. The Fangs screen reader emulator (see http://sourceforge.net/projects/fangs) reads the number (01234) 567890 as “left paren six hundred sixty-eight right paren five hundred sixty-seven thousand eight hundred ninety”. The “six hundred sixty-eight” bit is particularly curious: the 01234 is being interpreted as an octal number.

By encasing each digit within a <span /> tag, the digits are read out individually. So, (01234) 567890 becomes “left paren zero one two three four right paren five six seven eight nine zero”.

I have written an XSLT template that takes a phone number and applies a <span /> to each digit: